The newspapers will not print on Tuesday and the TV channels will go off-air on Wednesday.

The draft constitution, which was passed on 30 November by the Islamist-dominated Constituent Assembly and is set to be voted on in a referendum on 15 December, does not include articles against the imprisonment of journalists in cases related to freedom of expression as demanded by journalists.

The Journalists Syndicate's executive council had withdrawn its representatives from the Constituent Assembly in mid-November after its recommendations and suggestions were ignored by the assembly.

Later, the general assembly of the syndicate had threatened on 25 November to stage a strike against the constitutional declaration that president Mohamed Morsi issued on 23 November..

The TV channels that will go on strike on Wednesday, with blank screens broadcasting in place of content, are: ONTV channels, CBC and Modern channels, Al-Hayat Channels and Dream TV channels.

Already on Monday, Al-Wafd newspaper, Al-Youm 7 newspaper, Al-Watan newspaper, Al-Masry Al-Youm newspaper and Tahrir newspaper shared the same headline “No to dictatorship” with an illustration showing a prisoner made of newspaper sitting in a dark cell.

Online media will not go on strike on Tuesday to be able to cover the newspaper strike and other protests planned by the opposition against both the declation and the draft at the presidential palace in the evening.

"We need the online media to be able to send the message of the strike to the reader," Alaa El-Attar, member of the Journalists Syndicate board told Ahram Online.

"However, it will be left to every online new site to define the way it expresses its solidarity with the strike," El Attar added.

Ahram Arabic news website reporters have decided to go on partial strike on Monday in solidarity with the media strike planned for Tuesday.

"We announce, as the young reporters of Ahram Arabic portal, that on top the disgraceful rejection of journalism in the new draft constitution and how Judge Hossam El-Gheriany, the head of Constituent Assembly, mocked journalists,” said the statement.

"We decided to go on strike Monday, 3 December, in solidarity with the right of the reader to get free press, away from any pressure and in accordance with the decision of the Journalists' Syndicate Council to go on strike to object to the repression of freedoms, the approval to confiscate newspapers and imprisonment of journalists in the new draft constitution," the statement continued.

The reporters of Ahram Arabic news website, which is considered one of the biggest news portals in Egypt, are on strike, with the exception of a single reporter who is keeping the portal updated.

Would it be smarter for Egypt to not have a president at all? Data seems to indicate that nations without an empowered president deliver better for all people in a nation.

Many European nations, but also Tunesia and Libya, do not have an empowered president. Some nations have non-empowered kings, while others have non-empowered presidents, such as Germany, for instance, where the president is chosen by the elected representatives for ten years. The function is mainly administrative, keeping an eye on everyone if they are playing by the democratic rules.

Not having presidential elections has another benefit: Civil wars can be avoided because everyone is represented by their representatives instead of having a single-most powerful person sit in a single-highest seat that leaves close to half of the population without any say at that level.

Many nations only have a prime-minister, also not elected and only based on the overall outcome. The prime-minister is provided by the party with the most votes.

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